Published by Random House, New York, 1979
Seller: W. Fraser Sandercombe, Burlington, ON, Canada
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. Book Club Edition. (viii) 340 pp. Quarter-bound in black on yellow boards; yellow lettering on the spine. Light rubbing on the corners of the dustjacket; no interior markings. This anthology contains: The Cookie Lady by Philip K. Dick; Nothing Short of Highway Robbery by Lawrence Block; Puppet Show by Fredric Brown; De Mortuis by John Collier; Homicidal Hiccup by John D. MacDonald; Gone Girl by Ross MacDonald; Mother by Protest by Richard Matheson; Coincidence by William F. Nolan; The Same Old Grind by Bill Pronzini; Evil Star by Ray Russell; A Woman's Help by Henry Slesar; Here Daemos by August Derleth; She Fell Among Thieves by Robert Edmond Alter; See How They Run by Robert Bloch; The Hills Beyond Furcy by Robert G. Armstrong; A Gun is a Nervous Thing by Charlotte Armstrong; Snowball by Ursula Curtiss; The Wager by Robert L. Fish; Scream in a Soundproof Room by Michael Gilbert; Return of Verge Likens by Davis Grubb; The Fair Chance by James Hay; Paste a Smile on a Wall by John Keefauver; The Alarming Letters from Scottsdale by Warner Law; My Last Book by Clayre Lipman and Michel Lipman; The Interceptor by Barry N. Malzberg; Doctor's Dilemma by Harold Q. Masur; and Twenty-Two Cents a Day by Jack Ritchie. Size: 9. Book.
Published by Random House, New York, 1970
Seller: Scene of the Crime, ABAC, IOBA, St. Catharines, ON, Canada
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Near Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. First edition first printing of this collection of short stories that were all published earlier in Alfred Hitchcock or Ellery Queen magazines. This is the first appearance of them together as one collection. Light shelf wear to the tips of the dustjacket's spine. In near fine / near fine condition.
Published by The Franklin Library, Franklin Center, Pennsylvania, 1989
Seller: Vero Beach Books, Vero Beach, FL, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Fine. Ward, John (panel art and color frontispiece) (illustrator). 1st Edition. Fine unread condition faux navy blue leather boards with a color illustrated front cover paste-down, with gold front cover and spine lettering. Includes Preliminary Page Note by The Editors; Acknowledgments; and About the Authors. The volume also features gilt page edges on all three sides, a traditional 3-hubbed spine, and acid-free paper for permanence and durability. Illustrated with a double-page color frontispiece painting and color illustrated front and rear endpapers. "Great American Mystery Stories of the Twentieth Century presents an impressive array of writers. These literary sleuths - American writers who hail from all over the United States and even abroad - offer stories that reflect the varied experiences of a vast and culturally diverse country. The authors in this collection have garnered innumerable honors, from myriad awards conferred by their own mystery-writing colleagues to the Nobel Prize in Literature; they all share the writer's greatest reward, however, the broad readership and popular acclaim that can only come from creating superb, entertaining tales. Some of these mystery masters have left an indelible mark on the reading public by creating characters that have entered the national consciousness. The Saint, Lew Archer, Travis McGee, Uncle Abner - these names are real to mystery aficionados who know them well and have learned much about life from them. Other writers have given birth to characters who live only in one brief tale, making readers regret that they won't meet them again. Although the modern American mystery story has only recently gained respectability as the subject of academic study, the genre is an integral part of this country's literature. In fact, it stands at the very center of a markedly American literary offering, the short story. Edgar Allan Poe, the creator of the short story form, based the world's first mystery tale on the crime story, a style of fiction that originally appeared in the beginning of the nineteenth century. He enhanced the elements in these negligible stories with such genius that he lifted his own tales to the level of art. Poe's "The Murder in the Rue Morgue," first published in 1841, has been called by one critic "the single most important story in the history of the genre." Subsequent literary detectives may have occasionally felt daunted by following the mystery story's inimitable forefather; still, they have made their own distinctive contributions to this uniquely American literary form. Among them, the twenty-three writers in this anthology of American mystery masterpieces have written hundreds of memorable stories. Choosing the writers - not to mention the stories - from a national treasure of literary excellence was indeed difficult. The sheer number of outstanding American mystery stories offers endless hours of reading pleasure. To this day, superlative writers apply their varied skills to the genre first explored by Edgar Allan Poe. Readers new to this literary terrain will enjoy finding their way to some of mystery's hidden corners - as well as its landmarks. - The Editors" - from the Preliminary Page.